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Check the usual sources.
Bankers who will talk with you.
D & B rating.
Do Net search on them. Pay for the listing of who runs the company and who it's officers are, etc.

BBB
State Attorney General's office.
State licensing board.
Local and county inspectors.
Local and county wide temp labor agencies who may have hired out laborers to them regularly.

OTHER simular contractors in your area.
Local bid houses where contractors go to view and bid on jobs.
Several newspapers who may have done articles on the company.
The courthouse to see if this guy has filed any mechanics liens on anyof his clients.
Or visa-versa. Has anyone ... ANYONE filed liens against him?

Every contraction company has it's own speciality area where they dont usually sub it out. So you find out what they like to do themselves, then go speak with that type of materials supplier and ask questions.

Ask the company for a list of satisfied Sub Contractors!
Call the IRS and inquire if they are under investigation.

Speak with your attorney and see what they say about entering into any type of arrangement with this outfit.

Something I have learned. Don't get into anything your not comfortable with just for the sake of more money/more business. You may not reach millionaire status as quick but you'll have built a solid and firm foundation of guideposts and protections that your business will thrive under for many years to come.

And these traveling General Contractor outfits are some of the worst customers a mechanical sub could ever want. Even the very good ones are difficult to deal with and get paid from. I'd be very cautious irregardeless if they could finance the country of Saudi Arabia.

DHC, send them a credit application. Every company should have a credit application no matter how big or small they are. Then check the referrences they give you.

A day-care sounds like it could be a good solid account. Don't pass up a chance to get in there. Is this ConCor a general contractor who built the building and wants you to handler the warranty? Or, is it one of these service brokers. Watch the service broker more carefully than if they are just general contractors.

The reason for the out of town contractor is probably cause its one corporation that owns a few franchises of these rugrat holding facilities and they own most of their franchises in New York. The corporation hires its own maintenance people that cover all the franchises so if its the same corporation building a new one dont expect to get a service contract. I am in North Jersey never heard of Corcon but that doesn't mean anything I'd find out how many Kindercare's they built so far and dont locate the return in the under 2 not potty trained room!

thehumid1-------I live in NJ, a state where it's free to come in but you have to pay to leave!

I would give it a shot. It is not like you are putting out a lot of material and equipment. If they don't pay you in 60 days then you go to the management of Kindercare and complain. If they don't help you out go to the State and tell them how the little children are breathing air through filty filters because the place doesn't have a service contract any longer.

If all goes well in 5 years you'll be changing compressors for top dollar.